How to use RSS

What is RSS?

Really Simple Syndication (RSS) provides an easy way for you to read the latest postings to your favorite Web sites. Many Web sites offer RSS Feed subscriptions so that whenever new content is published, such as an updated news article, you receive a summary or the full article automatically.

How does this help me with QF?

To receive real time updates from Dr. Calhoun’s Blog, please subscribe to the RSS feed of your choice below. You can subscribe through your favorite news reading application on your smartphone (Feedly, Yahoo New Digest, etc), or through your internet browser or even through your mail client. This way you’re always up to date with what’s going in the market and prepared for your next quiz.

To subscribe to RSS feeds in Mail on a Mac (OS 10.7 Mountain Lion and below) :

Open Mail

Choose File > Add RSS Feeds or click the Add (+) button at the bottom of the sidebar, and then choose Add RSS Feeds.

Browse and select a feed you’ve bookmarked in Safari, or enter or paste the URL of a new feed.

To search feeds you’ve bookmarked in Safari, start typing in the search field. To select from a list of bookmarked feeds, Shift-click to select feeds that are next to each other in the list; Command-click to select feeds that are not next to one another.

If you want RSS feeds to be included in your Inbox, click “Show in Inbox.”

The government review of AT&T’s $85 billion takeover of Time Warner has reached an advanced stage, a significant milestone in a deal that was closely watched for signs of how the Trump administration would view large mergers.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc.’s sales rose in the latest quarter, boosted by an e-commerce surge and strong grocery sales, a sign that the world’s largest retailer continues to brush off the malaise afflicting some competitors.

Arista Networks is grabbing Cisco’s giant networking business, winning over its customers and rankling its top brass. The battle has divided CEO Jayshree Ullal and Cisco’s John Chambers, who were once close colleagues.

The schism that has opened between Corporate America and President Trump might look like an outlier, but in fact, big business has increasingly parted ways with Republicans on noneconomic issues, writes Greg Ip.

A federal court found that Uber Technologies customers sign over their rights to sue in court when they click to agree to the ride-hailing company’s terms of service, which include a provision requiring arbitration.